Ark's picture of the day

Today's Ark's suspended in doubts (will i fall? will i not fall?) elephant before holding on a thin thread of a dead log hope... was he hangin before that on halfpasthuman com?
 
Ark's Quantum Quirk of today is "Huang Dafa water canal" https://www.sott.net/quirk/391163

The history behind it is described in this article: _http://www.odditycentral.com/news/chinese-man-spends-36-years-chiseling-at-three-mountains-to-bring-water-to-his-village.html
Chinese Man Spends 36 Years Chiseling at Three Mountains to Bring Water to His Village
[...]
Before the impressive water channel, droughts cracked the soil around Caowangba and residents barely had enough drinking water. Apart from a single well, all water sources had dried up, and everyone could only take so much water, because taking too much from the well meant that someone else would be left with no water at all.

“There was a rule that nobody could take too much. If they did, someone else may not have any for breakfast. These conditions motivated us,” deputy chief Xu Zhou recalls. “Forget irrigation. We had a 330-square-meter rice paddy that was parched to the point you could put your foot in the cracks in the dry season. It was a serious problem. So, we started looking for a serious solution.”

But there weren’t too many options available, apart from moving away or doing nothing, and nothing was not an option. That was Huang Dafa’s main argument when he set out to convince the village that they had to bring water all the way from Yebiao village, a few kilometers away and separated from Caowangba by three mountains.

At first, people told him it was impossible, that the water would never reach them, but there was no other alternative, and Huang Dafa believed it could be done. He managed to convince a few young men and work on the ambitious canal began in 1959. He was only 23 at the time. But the conditions were hard, and Dafa had to lead his people in the most difficult and dangerous of tasks.

Huang recalls being the first to tie himself to a tree trunk at the top of a 300-meter-high cliff and take a leap of faith over the edge. “If I didn’t, nobody else dared,” he says. But even after witnessing his courage, some people refused to follow his example, because it was just too dangerous.

Villagers spent 10 years digging a 100-meter tunnel through a mountain peak using only hand tools, for nothing, because the water wouldn’t flow as they intended. Huang realized that while their determination was strong, their knowledge of waterways and irrigation was not, so he spent a few years studying water-system engineering in Zunyi’s Fengxiang town.
[...]
Even though he is now in his 80s, the former village chief still spends a lot of his time checking the canal regularly to make sure it is in working condition.

This amazing story of determination reminds us of another man who proved he could move mountains. Dashrath Manjhi, from India, spent over two decades chiseling away at a mountain with hand tools to make a road for his community, after the Government refused to. He is popularly known as The Man Who Moved a Mountain. _http://www.odditycentral.com/news/dashrath-manjhi-the-man-who-moved-a-mountain.html.
 
thorbiorn said:
Ark's Quantum Quirk of today is "Huang Dafa water canal" https://www.sott.net/quirk/391163

The history behind it is described in this article: _http://www.odditycentral.com/news/chinese-man-spends-36-years-chiseling-at-three-mountains-to-bring-water-to-his-village.html
Chinese Man Spends 36 Years Chiseling at Three Mountains to Bring Water to His Village
[...]
Before the impressive water channel, droughts cracked the soil around Caowangba and residents barely had enough drinking water. Apart from a single well, all water sources had dried up, and everyone could only take so much water, because taking too much from the well meant that someone else would be left with no water at all.

“There was a rule that nobody could take too much. If they did, someone else may not have any for breakfast. These conditions motivated us,” deputy chief Xu Zhou recalls. “Forget irrigation. We had a 330-square-meter rice paddy that was parched to the point you could put your foot in the cracks in the dry season. It was a serious problem. So, we started looking for a serious solution.”

But there weren’t too many options available, apart from moving away or doing nothing, and nothing was not an option. That was Huang Dafa’s main argument when he set out to convince the village that they had to bring water all the way from Yebiao village, a few kilometers away and separated from Caowangba by three mountains.

At first, people told him it was impossible, that the water would never reach them, but there was no other alternative, and Huang Dafa believed it could be done. He managed to convince a few young men and work on the ambitious canal began in 1959. He was only 23 at the time. But the conditions were hard, and Dafa had to lead his people in the most difficult and dangerous of tasks.

Huang recalls being the first to tie himself to a tree trunk at the top of a 300-meter-high cliff and take a leap of faith over the edge. “If I didn’t, nobody else dared,” he says. But even after witnessing his courage, some people refused to follow his example, because it was just too dangerous.

Villagers spent 10 years digging a 100-meter tunnel through a mountain peak using only hand tools, for nothing, because the water wouldn’t flow as they intended. Huang realized that while their determination was strong, their knowledge of waterways and irrigation was not, so he spent a few years studying water-system engineering in Zunyi’s Fengxiang town.
[...]
Even though he is now in his 80s, the former village chief still spends a lot of his time checking the canal regularly to make sure it is in working condition.

This amazing story of determination reminds us of another man who proved he could move mountains. Dashrath Manjhi, from India, spent over two decades chiseling away at a mountain with hand tools to make a road for his community, after the Government refused to. He is popularly known as The Man Who Moved a Mountain. _http://www.odditycentral.com/news/dashrath-manjhi-the-man-who-moved-a-mountain.html.

That picture and the story behind it made my day. Where there's a will, there's a way (and a tunnel and a road). Thank you for sharing.
 
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